Goodio供应链:巧克力的未来?

Markko Hamalainen, Tim Kraft, Gerry Yemen, Meng Zhang, Yanchong Zheng
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本案例以芬兰一家手工巧克力公司为例,分析供应链透明度对供应商和消费者的影响。这个案例讨论了企业家Jukka Peltola致力于社会责任和目的而不是利润背后的基本原理。它描述了Goodio在透明度方面的努力,并跟随Peltola询问他还可以做些什么来提高透明度,以及供应链透明度的不同表现如何影响跨文化消费者的购买决策。2019年1月17日Goodio供应链:巧克力的未来?Jukka Peltola认为这是不健康的,从来没有吃过很多巧克力。当他得知可可富含抗氧化剂,对健康有益时,Peltola很惊讶,并决定尝试一下。当他在饮食中加入生可可并放弃乳制品时,佩尔托拉开始感到活力焕发。他仔细阅读标签,寻找健康的巧克力产品,但发现很难找到配料的来源或加工过程。他不断回到一个简单的概念上——“如果有一个你可以信任的食品品牌呢?”这让佩尔托拉开始成为一名巧克力师,并与他人分享他新获得的能量和幸福。Peltola离开了Rovio Entertainment(因《愤怒的小鸟》而出名)的电子游戏制作人的工作,在芬兰赫尔辛基开设了自己的第一家手工巧克力工厂,成为首席创意官。他的公司Goodio从芬兰政府那里获得了1.5万欧元的补贴和3.5万欧元的贷款。三年后,为了增加产量和容纳更多的员工,Goodio搬到了一个新工厂。这不是一个典型的生产基地,而是一个游客中心。2016年,Goodio的销售额达到100万欧元,到2018年夏末,Peltola和他的团队经营着一家中型巧克力公司,市场遍及芬兰、瑞典、挪威、丹麦、德国、英国、美国和日本。古迪奥致力于社会责任和宗旨,而不是利润。佩尔托拉认为,透明度是实现这一承诺的关键。因此,古迪奥从路易斯·曼奇尼(Luis Mancini)那里购买了35吨可可豆,他是古迪奥多年来的合作伙伴。曼奇尼以高于农场出厂价的价格向农民购买可可豆。此外,Goodio专注于采购优质原料,如当地采摘的芬兰蓝莓,用于制作生巧克力. . . .
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Goodio Supply Chain: A Chocolatey Future?
This case uses the experiences of a Finnish craft chocolate company to analyze the impact of supply chain transparency on suppliers and consumers. The case discusses the rationale behind entrepreneur Jukka Peltola's business committed to social responsibility and purpose over profit. It describes Goodio's efforts toward transparency and follows Peltola as he asks what more he can do to advance transparency and how different presentations of supply chain transparency affect consumer purchase decisions cross-culturally. Excerpt UVA-OM-1613 Jan. 17, 2019 Goodio Supply Chain: A Chocolatey Future? Thinking it was unhealthy, Jukka Peltola had never eaten much chocolate. When he learned that cacao was high in antioxidants providing health benefits, Peltola was surprised and decided to try it. As he added raw cacao to his diet and discarded dairy products, Peltola started to feel rejuvenated. He carefully read labels searching for healthy chocolate products, but found it difficult to find out where ingredients came from or how they were processed. He kept coming back to a simple notion—“what if there was a food brand you could trust?” That set Peltola in motion to become a chocolatier and share his newfound energy and well-being with others. Leaving his work as a video game producer for Rovio Entertainment (of Angry Birds fame), Peltola opened his first craft chocolate factory in Helsinki, Finland, becoming chief creative officer. Goodio, his company, started with a EUR15,000 subsidy and a EUR35,000 loan from the government of Finland. Three years later, Goodio moved to a new factory to increase production volume and accommodate more staff. Not the typical manufacturing site, this one included a visitor center. Goodio reached EUR1million in sales in 2016 and by the end of summer 2018, Peltola and his team were running a medium-sized chocolate company with markets in Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Germany, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Japan. Goodio was committed to social responsibility and purpose over profit. Peltola believed that transparency was key to that promise. As a result, Goodio purchased 35 tonnes of cacao from Luis Mancini, a farmer/supplier with whom Goodio had developed a relationship over the years. Mancini paid above farm-gate prices to farmers for cacao beans. In addition, Goodio focused on purchasing quality ingredients, such as locally picked Finnish blueberries, to go into the raw chocolate. . . .
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